ABSTRACT: The articles are:. 1. Ethnocide, by Alison Palmer. 2. The
holocaust, by Michael Dobkowski. 3.The issue of the holocaust as a unique
event, by Alan Rosenberg and Evelyn Silverman. 4. The victims who survived, by
Sidney M. Bolkosky. 5. The Armenian genocide : revisionism and denial, by
Rouben Adalian. 6. The Ukrainian famine, by Lyman H. Legters. 7. Genocide and
modern war, by Eric Markusen. 8. Early warning, intervention and prevention of
genocide, by Israel W. Charny.

ABSTRACT: CONTENTS:.
Introduction.
1. The Armenians and Greeks of Anatolia.
2. The Nazi Attack on the Jews.
3. Soviet Deportation of the Chechens-Ingush and the Crimean Tatars.
4. The Expulsion of Germans from Poland and Czechoslovakia.
5. The Wars of Yugoslav Succession.
Conclusion Notes Acknowledgments Index

ABSTRACT: TABLE OF CONTENTS: Introduction: Assessing The Politics of
Diversity in Transition Countries, by Will Kymlicka and Francois Grin.
PART I. ONE STATE - ONE LANGUAGE?
1. The 1999 Slovak Minority Language Law: Internal or External Politics?, by
Farimah Daftary and Kinga Gal.
2. Language Battles in the Baltic States: From 1989 into 2002, by Priit Järve.
3. Identities and Language Politics in Ukraine: The Challenges of Nation-State
Building, by Viktor Stepanenko.
PART II. TITULAR LANGUAGE PROMOTION AND BILINGUALISM: 1. Language Policy in
the Republic of Armenia in the Transitional Period, by Rouben Karapetyan.
2. The Politics of Language Reform and Bilingualism in Tatarstan, by Yagfar Z.
Garipov and Helen M. Faller.
3. Kalmykia: Language Promotion against all Odds, by Francois Grin.
PART III. IDENTITY; DIFFERENTIATION AND UNIFICATION: 1. Language Issues in the
Context of 'Slovenian Smallness', by Petra Roter.
2. Ethnicity, Language and Transition Politics in Romania: The Hungarian
Minority in Context, by Carmen Kettley.
3. Language Corpus and Language Politics: The Case of the Standardization of
Romani, by Ian F. Hancock

ABSTRACT: PART I. The Emergence of Human Rights Regimes: 1. The end of
civilization and the rise of human rights: the mid-20th century disjuncture,
by Mark Mazower. 2. The 'human rights revolution' at work: displaced persons
in post-war Europe, by G. Daniel Cohen.
3. Legal diplomacy: law, politics, and the genesis of postwar European human
rights, by Mikael Rask Madsen.
PART II. Postwar Universalism and Legal Theory: 4. Personalism, community, and
the origins of human rights, by Samuel Moyn. 5. René Cassin: les droit de
l'homme and the universality of human rights, 1945–1966, by Glenda Sluga. 6.
Rudolf Laun and the human rights of Germans in occupied and early West
Germany, by Lora Wildenthal.
PART III. Human Rights, State Socialism, and Dissent: 7. Embracing and
contesting: the Soviet Union and the Universal Declaration of Human Rights,
1948–1958, by Jennifer Amos. 8. Soviet rights-talk in the post-Stalin era, by
Benjamin Nathans. 9. Charter 77 and the Roma: human rights and dissent in
socialist Czechoslovakia, by Celia Donert.
PART IV. Genocide, Humanitarianism, and the Limits of Law: 10. Toward world
law? Human rights and the failure of the legalist paradigm of war, by Devin O.
Pendas. 11. 'Source of embarrassment': human rights, state of emergency, and
the wars of decolonization, by Fabian Klose. 12. The United Nations,
humanitarianism and human rights: war crimes/genocide trials for Pakistani
soldiers in Bangladesh, 1971–1974, by A. Dirk Moses.
PART V. Human Rights, Sovereignty, and the Global Condition: 13. African
nationalists and human rights, 1940s to 1970s, by Andreas Eckert. 14. The
International Labour Organization and the globalization of rights, 1944–1970,
by Daniel Roger Maul. 15. 'Under a magnifying glass': the international human
rights campaign against Chile in the 1970s, by Jan Eckel.